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Early Viking Boat Grave Discovered in Norway
Sep 20, 2017
Early Viking Boat Grave Discovered in Norway
Archaeologists excavating a market square in Trondheim, Norway, have discovered the remains of a boat grave and possible human remains dating to around the time the Vikings started exploring and raiding lands across Europe. The boat was at least 13 feet (4 meters) long and was buried in the ground...
Photos: Viking-Age Fortress Unearthed in Denmark
Sep 29, 2017
Photos: Viking-Age Fortress Unearthed in Denmark
Viking history (Image credit: Peter Jensen/Aarhus University)Archaeologists are uncovering the mysteries of a Viking-age fortress at Borgring, on the island of Zealand in eastern Denmark, which is thought to have been built late in the 10th century by the Danish king Harald Bluetooth. Until a few years ago, just four...
Viking Fort Reveals Secrets of Danish King's Elaborate Military Network
Sep 29, 2017
Viking Fort Reveals Secrets of Danish King's Elaborate Military Network
The discovery of a Viking-age fortress in Denmark has shed new light on a network of military sites built by the 10th-century Danish king Harald Bluetooth, according to archaeologists. Bluetooth — for whom the eponymous digital network technology is named — is credited with building several large, circular fortresses, or...
Early Medieval Farming Village Unearthed Near Famed Viking Site
Nov 14, 2017
Early Medieval Farming Village Unearthed Near Famed Viking Site
Archaeologists in Denmark have unearthed the remains of a 1,500-year-old farming village near the famed Viking site of Jelling in central Jutland. The excavated village contains traces of up to 400 farm buildings, including several longhouses that would have each formed the center of a family farm. Based on the...
Viking-Era Stone Carved with Runes Found in Norway
Dec 5, 2017
Viking-Era Stone Carved with Runes Found in Norway
A stone carved with symbols known as runes and dating to the Middle Ages has been discovered during an excavation ahead of a railway-construction project in Oslo, Norway. The runes, which were found engraved on a whetstone (a stone used for sharpening knives), date to sometime around 1,000 years ago...
Medieval Text Resolves Mystery of Viking-Irish Battle
Jan 24, 2018
Medieval Text Resolves Mystery of Viking-Irish Battle
The famous Irish king, Brian Boru, is widely credited with defeating the Vikings at the Battle of Clontarf more than 1,000 years ago. But not everyone heaps praise on the king. For the past 300 years, historians have cast doubt on whether Boru's main enemies were the Vikings, or his...
Mystery Behind Mass Grave of Viking Warriors Finally Solved
Feb 5, 2018
Mystery Behind Mass Grave of Viking Warriors Finally Solved
Archaeologists could barely believe their luck when they uncovered a mass grave in the 1980s that appeared to be filled with the remains of more than 200 warriors from the Viking Great Army. But subsequent radiocarbon dating cast doubt on this idea, showing that some of the remains dated to...
Archaeologists Closer to Finding Lost Viking Settlement
Mar 6, 2018
Archaeologists Closer to Finding Lost Viking Settlement
A lost Viking settlement known as Hóp, which has been mentioned in sagas passed down over hundreds of years, is said to have supported wild grapes, abundant salmon and inhabitants who made canoes out of animal hides. Now, a prominent archaeologist says the settlement likely resides in northeastern New Brunswick....
How Human Error Led the Vikings to Canada
Apr 12, 2018
How Human Error Led the Vikings to Canada
Viking navigators guided by mysterious crystal sunstones may have accidentally sailed on to the mainland of North America while looking for Greenland, according to new research. The new study shows that so-called sunstones — crystals of translucent minerals like Iceland spar, which split the polarization of light passing through them...
Photos: Vikings accessorized with tiny metal dragons
Jun 28, 2018
Photos: Vikings accessorized with tiny metal dragons
Dragonhead (Image credit: Photograph by Lena Holmquist; Antiquity 2018)Archaeologists discovered a Viking dragonhead pin made out of lead in Birka, a Viking archeological town in Sweden, in 2015. Amazingly, the newfound pin nearly matches a soapstone mold of a dragonhead found by a Swedish farmer in 1887. [Read more about...
Discovery of Rare Viking Dragon Pin Solves 130-Year-Old Mystery
Jun 28, 2018
Discovery of Rare Viking Dragon Pin Solves 130-Year-Old Mystery
More than 130 years ago, a Swedish farmer discovered a black dragon — or, that is, a Viking carving of one that had a pointy horn on its head and a curled mane down its neck. The soft soapstone carving looked like a mold for casting metals, but the farmer...
How on Earth Did These Burials of Viking Descendants Wind Up in Sicily?
Jul 23, 2018
How on Earth Did These Burials of Viking Descendants Wind Up in Sicily?
The discovery of 10 burials near a medieval church in Sicily has led to a rare finding: the skeletal remains of the descendants of Vikings. Archaeologists found the 800-year-old burials near the church of San Michele del Golfo near Palermo. The buried individuals were likely Normans, a group that arose...
An 8-Year-Old Girl Pulled This 1,500-Year-Old Sword Out of a Swedish Lake
Oct 5, 2018
An 8-Year-Old Girl Pulled This 1,500-Year-Old Sword Out of a Swedish Lake
It was a beautiful summer day in Småland, Sweden, when Andy Vanecek heard the words every father wants to hear. Daddy, I found a sword! According to a report on the Swedish news site The Local, Andy and his 8-year-old daughter Saga were wrapping up a day at Vidöstern lake,...
Viking Ship and Cemetery Found Buried in Norway
Oct 15, 2018
Viking Ship and Cemetery Found Buried in Norway
Archaeologists using radar scans have detected a Viking ship buried beneath a cemetery in Norway. The Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research (NIKU) said that the archaeologists discovered the anomaly using radar scans of an area in Østfold County. The ship seems to be about 66 feet (20 meters) long...
Do Canadian Carvings Depict Vikings? Removing Mammal Fat May Tell
Oct 16, 2018
Do Canadian Carvings Depict Vikings? Removing Mammal Fat May Tell
Carvings uncovered in the Canadian Arctic may be the earliest portraits of the Vikings created in the Americas. But archaeologists have been puzzling over whether the artwork really shows the infamous seafarers. Now, scientists think a simple, flammable liquid called acetone could help solve this mystery by removing sea-mammal oil...
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